Dra Abu El-Naga, Egypt

Located on the west bank of the Nile near Thebes, the Egyptian site of Dra Abu el-Naga is an important non-royal cemetery or necropolis. From 1921 to 1923, Clarence Fisher excavated at the site, focusing on the tombs of New Kingdom officials and the mortuary complex of the 18th Dynasty King Amenhotep I and his wife Nefertari (1525-1504 BCE). His excavations provided significant artifacts for the Penn Museum, including statuary, pottery funerary furnishings, and painted reliefs.
- Object[287]
- yes[287]
- egyptian[287]
- amulet[1]
- bilbil flask[1]
- bottle[1]
- bowl fragment[1]
- brick[2]
- canopic jar lid[2]
- dish[2]
- figurine[1]
- flask[4]
- jar[6]
- jar fragment[4]
- jar handle[1]
- jar lid[1]
- model[1]
- ostracon[254]
- rim sherd[1]
- sherd[5]
- dra abu el-naga[287]
- egypt[287]
- area 1[6]
- area 1, in courtyard of tomb 1[1]
- brick tomb xi[1]
- court no. 15[1]
- court of brick tomb 6[1]
- court of tomb 158[1]
- iii -- 2[1]
- l. c. vi, 3, 65 x, x/2[1]
- l.c.[1]
- l.c. 60[1]
- l.c. 60 11[1]
- l.c. 60 a[1]
- l.c. 76 shaft x, x/3[1]
- l.c. ii, 3, surface x, x/2[1]
- l.c. vi 3 x[1]
- l.c. vi, 1, 44 b, x/8[1]
- l.c. vii, 63, x/24[1]
- lc 306, x/2[1]
- lc 60 x 11[1]
- lc 71 surface x[1]
- lc iii 3[1]
- lc vi 1/2[1]
- lc vii 2/63[1]
- mandara 162[1]
- mandera 7[1]
- no. 6 tomb court[1]
- t15[1]
- t159[1]
- t19[1]
- t6[2]
- tomb 1[1]
- tomb 44 in the lower cemetery[1]
- tomb tt 283[1]
- uc[2]
- bed[1]
- couch[1]
- horse head[1]
- human head[1]
- human head?[1]
- khnum[1]
- magical spell[2]
- coptic language[120]
- demotic[2]
- hieratic[46]
- hieroglyphic[30]
- brown ware[1]
- painted[5]
- red ware[1]
































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